May 16, 2026 6:03 PM -
Question: It is said that a Kabbalist does not work according to the measure of “bitter-sweet” but according to the criterion of “true-false.” How does this transition happen?
Answer: Obtaining a new quality must occur in accordance with the measure of one’s desire; that is, I must increase the desire for the upper force, as well as change its use and direction from myself to the upper.
I may be able to increase this desire to some extent through a kind of “internal advertising,” constantly coaxing and persuading myself. But how do I change its direction? Such a change compared to my initial state is completely opposite and contrary to my nature.
All the desires I currently possess are aimed at my own benefit. Yet, I must orient the new desire I am acquiring and growing in the direction opposite to myself. This is something utterly incomprehensible to me, since all my desires are directed at me.
Therefore, given my current makeup and considering the immense strength of this desire, it is not in my power to change it so it is directed away from me. The force that can change the direction of desire, I also get from above. Let us call it the light of “AB-SAG“; the name itself is not so important now, what is important is that it is a kind of light that corrects me.
This change in me is revealed in the following way: I move from evaluating based on “bitter-sweet” to a new calculation.
Everything directed at me feels “sweet” because this is how all my senses work, perceiving the upper force within the framework of this world. Whatever is directed away from me feels “bitter.” Can I replace the feeling of sweetness with bitterness, and bitterness with sweetness? No, I cannot.
How can I make such a transformation? I do this with the help of an additional system that I develop alongside the sensory system consisting of the Rosh, the “head” of the Partzuf, with a screen. This system helps me change the bitter to sweet and the sweet to bitter through a completely different analysis, known as the principle of “true-false.”
If I stick to the “true-false” analysis, I can convince myself to a certain extent that what I think is sweet is actually bitter, and what I think is bitter is actually sweet. If I add truth to the bitter and falsehood to the sweet, and then increase the importance of truth over bitterness, then bitterness no longer seems so bitter to me, because truth dominates it.
And if I infuse the sweet with falseness, then the sweetness is no longer perceived as sweet to me because falsehood displaces and diminishes the sweetness, thereby creating a feeling of something negative.
This is how I redefine good and bad for myself, shifting my criteria from sweet and bitter to true and false. Through this, I come to another analysis: the ability to go “above knowledge,” transcending the feeling of bitter-sweet, distinguishing and deciding based on the principle of “true-false.”
If I stick to this approach, then I can do it… Or, rather, I am potentially capable because there are still many additional conditions, most importantly is that the upper force is needed to realize all this. This does not imply that I can do this completely on my own, as it may seem.
If I work within this framework, I really can transition to a state opposite of the one I was in. And this means I have ascended to the next spiritual degree, as it is written: “I saw the opposite world,” a reality opposite to my previous state.
The direction of desire changes. Now that everything is in order and the desire is directed at the upper force, to the extent of the magnitude of the desire itself, the very magnitude of this vector, I begin to perceive the way the upper force perceives. Accordingly, I can assess and determine that this level is called “Ruach,” “Neshama,” “Haya,” and so on.
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From the Daily Kabbalah Lesson 4/27/26, Rabash, “Peace After a Dispute Is More Important than Having No Disputes at All”
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